You need to do the prostitution in the Inn until you can't do it anymore, then you have to leave the Inn but when the game says if you want to go home, you select No. Then you should be in night free roam.How to access/ switch night scene?
I shudder to think of the actual number when adding the untranslated ones. Much less, games where there IS a nun section (like a costume change or a side quest)In the span of 20 years since the beginning of the boom of erotic games, only 37 is not that much. I know that it's only the English version, but still...
Ok, thanks for the helpYou need to do the prostitution in the Inn until you can't do it anymore, then you have to leave the Inn but when the game says if you want to go home, you select No. Then you should be in night free roam.
I had the depravity lvl 2 and that is the limit it seems.
So far Evening Starter is the best I've played with that trope.If I had a nickel every time I played a corruption game that involved a girl subjected with an over 1,000,000G debt collection mechanic, It wouldn't even be close to enough, but it wouldn't matter since I'm here from the corruption anyway.
Wait, you guys have debt forgiveness?Are debts in Japan not forgiven on death like they are in the US? Is that why all of these H-games follow this same predicament?
Literally the same plot as Enishia"You must repay 1,000,000G debt in 30 days."
Well at least are not 20 000 pesos that u can get in a day
Not nessisarly. It really just depends on the type of debt, and the individual state laws here in America.Wait, you guys have debt forgiveness?
They are but there's often an excuse in these scenarios. It might be an isekai, where Japanese law doesn't apply. The payor might be the spouse or a (tricked) guarantor, making them equal owners of the debt. Or the lender might be an extralegal entity (i.e. the Yakuza) who don't care about the law. Heck, the lender might simply not care. There are plenty of cases in the US and other parts of the world where lenders try to trick families of the deceased to pay for the debts of deceased debtors.Are debts in Japan not forgiven on death like they are in the US? Is that why all of these H-games follow this same predicament?